Porcelain: A History from the Heart of Europe

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"This is the book on porcelain we have been waiting for. . . . A remarkable achievement."—Edmund de Waal, author of The Hare with Amber Eyes
A sweeping cultural and economic history of porcelain, from the eighteenth century to the present

Porcelain was invented in medieval China—but its secret recipe was first reproduced in Europe by an alchemist in the employ of the Saxon king Augustus the Strong. Saxony’s revered Meissen factory could not keep porcelain’s ingredients secret for long, however, and scores of Holy Roman princes quickly founded their own mercantile manufactories, soon to be rivaled by private entrepreneurs, eager to make not art but profits. As porcelain’s uses multiplied and its price plummeted, it lost much of its identity as aristocratic ornament, instead taking on a vast number of banal, yet even more culturally significant, roles. By the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, it became essential to bourgeois dining, and also acquired new functions in insulator tubes, shell casings, and teeth.

Weaving together the experiences of entrepreneurs and artisans, state bureaucrats and female consumers, chemists and peddlers, Porcelain traces the remarkable story of “white gold” from its origins as a princely luxury item to its fate in Germany’s cataclysmic twentieth century. For three hundred years, porcelain firms have come and gone, but the industry itself, at least until very recently, has endured. After Augustus, porcelain became a quintessentially German commodity, integral to provincial pride, artisanal industrial production, and a familial sense of home.

Telling the story of porcelain’s transformation from coveted luxury to household necessity and flea market staple, Porcelain offers a fascinating alternative history of art, business, taste, and consumption in Central Europe.

Author(s): Suzanne L. Marchand
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Year: 2020

Language: English
Pages: 517

Cover
Contents
List of Illustrations and Tables
Note on Currencies and Other Abbreviations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1. Reinventing the Recipe
Chapter 2. The Challenge of Wedgwood and the Rise of the Private Firm
Chapter 3. Making, Marketing, and Consuming in the “Golden Age"
Chapter 4. Surviving the Revolutions
Chapter 5. The Discrete Charms of Biedermeier Porcelain
Chapter 6. Of Capitalism and Cartels: The Glory Days of the Private Producer, 1848–1914
Chapter 7. Porcelain, the Wilhelmine Plastic
Chapter 8. The Fragility of Interwar Porcelain
Chapter 9. From Cold War Wonder to Contemporary White Elephant: Does the Story End Here?
Notes
Bibliography
Image Credits
Index
Color Plate